Victims of Travis Scott’s Astroworld festival died due to “compression asphyxia,” medical examiner finds

Victims of Travis Scott’s Astroworld festival died due to “compression asphyxia,” medical examiner finds
Victims of Travis Scott’s Astroworld festival died due to “compression asphyxia,” medical examiner finds
Rick Kern/Getty Images

A cause of death for the 10 victims that died as a result of the Astroworld Festival tragedy has been determined. 

The Harris County Medical Examiner’s office ruled all victims died of “compression asphyxia.” Of the 10 victims, only one, Danish Baig, 27, had a “contributory cause” due to the “combined toxic effects of cocaine, methamphetamine and ethanol,” the report states, according to ABC affiliate KTRK.

In addition to Baig, the remaining identified victims were Rodolfo “Rudy” Peña, 23, Madison Dubiski, 23, Franco Patiño, 21, Jacob Jurinek, 20, John Hilgert, 14, Axel Acosta, 21, Brianna Rodriguez, 16, Bharti Shahan, 22, and Ezra Blount, nine.

All the deaths were ruled accidental. 

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Victims of Travis Scott’s Astroworld died due to “compression asphyxia,” medical examiner finds

Victims of Travis Scott’s Astroworld festival died due to “compression asphyxia,” medical examiner finds
Victims of Travis Scott’s Astroworld festival died due to “compression asphyxia,” medical examiner finds
Rick Kern/Getty Images

A cause of death for the 10 victims that died as a result of the Astroworld Festival tragedy has been determined. 

The Harris County Medical Examiner’s office ruled all victims died of “compression asphyxia.” Of the 10 victims only one, Danish Baig, had a “contributory cause” due to the “combined toxic effects of cocaine, methamphetamine and ethanol,” the report states, according to ABC affiliate KTRK.

In addition to Baig, 27, the remaining identified victims were Rodolfo “Rudy” Peña, 23, Madison Dubiski, 23, Franco Patiño, 21, Jacob Jurinek, 20, John Hilgert, 14, Axel Acosta, 21, Brianna Rodriguez, 16, Bharti Shahan, 22, and Ezra Blount, nine.

All the deaths were ruled an accident.  

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Winter holiday travel rush likely to approach pre-pandemic levels

Winter holiday travel rush likely to approach pre-pandemic levels
Winter holiday travel rush likely to approach pre-pandemic levels
dan_prat/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — The holiday travel rush is well underway and experts are predicting U.S. airports and roadways will be nearly as busy as they were pre-pandemic.

About 109 million travelers are expected to take to the roads and skies for Christmas and New Year’s, according to AAA, which represents more than 90% of the 2019 pre-pandemic travel record of 119 million.

The bulk of travelers, 100 million, are projected to drive to their destinations.

But the airports are bracing for crowds as well. Friday is already estimated to be the third busiest day to fly to your winter getaway, according to travel booking app Hopper, with 2.4 million available seats.

Here’s what you need to know if you’re traveling this holiday season:

Prices at the pump

With 100 million drivers expected on the roads from Dec. 23 to Jan. 2, according to AAA, all eyes are on gas prices.

While prices are still relatively high — up by 45% compared to last year — they are dipping slightly.

The national average price of gasoline is down 10 cents per gallon since Thanksgiving, according to GasBuddy, and the national average on Christmas is projected to decline from today’s $3.32 to $3.25 per gallon.

GasBuddy predicts prices at the pump will continue to fall into the new year.

Delays on the road

The roadways will be busy with major metro areas across the country estimated to see more than double the delays than on a normal day, according to transportation analytics company INRIX.

INRIX says drivers in New York City, for example, are “likely” to experience more than three times the delays.

Roads are expected to be the most congested the afternoon and evening of Thursday, Dec. 23, the morning and evening of Monday, Dec. 27, and the afternoon and evening of Sunday, Jan. 2

“Early morning travel in general has seen a decrease, likely due to more people working from home,” AAA spokesperson Ellen Edmonds told ABC News, “and therefore, leaving early in the morning is the best bet.”

Crowds at the airport

The Transportation Security Administration is prepared to screen near pre-pandemic travel volumes over the winter holidays with Dec. 23 and Jan. 3 projected to be the busiest days.

U.S. airlines are gearing up, with AAA saying they will see a 184% increase in passengers from last year.

United Airlines expects around 8 million people to fly on their airline from Dec. 16 to Jan 3, more than double the number of fliers compared to last year, and even more people than they saw over Thanksgiving.

They’ve added more than 200 daily domestic flights to meet the demand.

Delta Air Lines is prepared to fly the most people over the holidays since before the pandemic began with at least 7.8 million fliers from Dec. 17 to Jan. 3.

“Christmas is going to be one of the busiest times to travel this year,” Hopper economist Adit Damodaran told ABC News. “I would expect it to be very busy. Certainly if you’re at the airports it’s going to feel like pre-pandemic levels of traffic. We’re expecting about 2.2 million travelers a day on average going through TSA checkpoints.”

Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson is projected to be the busiest airport over the Christmas holiday, according to Hopper, with peak congestion on the morning of Thursday, Dec. 23. Atlanta is followed by Los Angeles and Denver as the three busiest airports for the holiday week.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘Striking’ impact of COVID-19 pandemic on adolescent mental health

‘Striking’ impact of COVID-19 pandemic on adolescent mental health
‘Striking’ impact of COVID-19 pandemic on adolescent mental health
Official White House Photo by Cameron Smith

(NEW YORK) — Dr. Deborah Levine has been a pediatric emergency medicine physician in the New York City area for over two decades. In recent years, she has observed an increase in the number of mental health emergencies in adolescents — which only got worse during the pandemic.

“The problem has always been there. The pandemic, we felt it even more so,” said Levine, who practices at NewYork-Presbyterian Komansky Children’s Hospital and is an associate professor of clinical pediatrics and emergency medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine.

Last week’s surgeon general’s advisory on the youth mental health crisis during the pandemic didn’t come as a surprise to hospitalists like Levine, who continues to see the impact as demand still outpaces access 21 months later.

“We’re seeing it on the ground,” Levine said. “We’re looking for ways to help ameliorate the crisis and in the meantime, we’re actively treating these children who need help.”

Hospitals are often a “safety net” for people experiencing mental health emergencies, she said, and that’s only become more pronounced as outpatient clinics and offices continue to be overwhelmed.

“I think this crisis is so significant that we just can’t meet the demand,” she said.

Some hospitals are trying to meet the immediate demand by increasing bed capacity. Though greater access to psychiatric care is needed to help prevent mental health issues from escalating to emergencies in the first place, experts said. At the same time, an existing shortage of behavioral health professionals is compounding the problem, they said. Telemedicine, which proliferated during the pandemic, can also continue to increase access, particularly vulnerable youth in more rural areas, where specialists are in shorter supply.

The surgeon general’s advisory came on the heels of a coalition of pediatric groups declaring children’s mental health challenges amid the COVID-19 pandemic a “national emergency” earlier this fall. The medical associations pointed to research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that found an uptick in mental health-related emergency department visits for children early in the pandemic when compared to 2019, as well as a 50.6% increase in suspected suicide attempt emergency department visits among girls ages 12 to 17.

Depression and suicide attempts in adolescents were already on the rise before the pandemic, the surgeon general’s advisory noted.

“I am worried about our children,” Dr. Vivek Murthy, the surgeon general, said during a recent White House briefing. “[Our] kids have been struggling for a long time, even for this pandemic.”

Continued increase in demand

When the pandemic disrupted access to schools, health care and social services, Texas Children’s Hospital saw adolescents who had received prior treatment for issues such as anxiety and depression come back, along with “tremendous increases of new-onset problems,” Chief of Psychology Karin Price told ABC News.

Even as schools and services have gone back online, the volume “hasn’t let up at all,” she said.

“Our numbers of referrals on the outpatient side continue to increase — general referrals for common mental health conditions in children and adolescents,” she said. “Unfortunately, we’ve also seen increases in the demand for crisis services — children and adolescents having to come to the emergency center for crisis evaluations and crisis intervention.”

During the previous fiscal year, behavioral health had the third-highest number of referrals throughout the Texas Children’s Hospital system — behind ENT surgery and orthopedic surgery — much higher than it typically is, Price said.

“That has been very striking within our system and really demonstrating the need,” she said.

The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia has seen more than a 30% increase in emergency department volume for mental health emergencies compared to the year before, according to Psychiatrist-in-Chief Dr. Tami Benton.

“We’re starting to see more kids who were previously well, so they were youngsters who were not having any specific mental health conditions prior to the pandemic, who are now presenting with more depression, anxiety,” she said. “So things have definitely not been heading in the right direction.”

The hospital has also been seeing adolescents with autism who lost services during the pandemic seeking treatment for behavioral problems, as well as an increase in girls with suicidal ideation, she said.

As the need has gone up, the number of services hasn’t necessarily followed, she said.

“It’s the same services that were challenged before, there are just more young people in need of services,” she said.

Adapting to the need

Amid the demand for psychiatric beds, CHOP converted its extended care unit to treat children in the emergency department while they wait for hospitalization, Benton said. The hospital also shifted clinicians to provide emergency outpatient services.

“We’ve had to make a lot of changes in our care practices to try to accommodate the volume to try to see more young people,” Benton said.

CHOP was already planning pre-pandemic to expand its ambulatory practices, though the increased demand has only accelerated the project, Benton said. The hospital is also building a 46-bed in-patient child and adolescent psychiatry unit. Both are slated to open later next year, “but as you can imagine, that’s really not soon enough,” Benton said.

Some hospitals have been looking at ways to prevent children from needing crisis services in the first place. Texas Children’s Hospital has developed a behavioral health task force that, for one, is focused on supporting screening for mental health concerns at pediatric practices, Price said. Levine is part of a team researching the pandemic’s effect on pediatric mental health emergencies with one goal being to prevent repeat visits to the emergency department.

“We’re trying to see if we can target certain areas that are at high-risk,” Levine said.

As far as increasing access, telehealth services have been invaluable during the pandemic, especially for reaching more rural populations. Though access may still be limited due to a family’s means, Levine said. Demand also continues to be high amid a workforce shortage, Price said.

“Behavioral health professionals have a lot of different opportunities now,” she said. “Any kind of behavioral health clinicians that didn’t already have full caseloads before certainly have them now.”

According to the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, every state has a high to severe shortage of child and adolescent psychiatrists.

With those challenges in mind, engaging community partners will be key to addressing the mental health crisis, Benton said.

“The most important thing for us to do right now really is focused on expanding access, and I think the quickest way for us to do that is for us to partner with other communities where kids are every day,” she said. “Greater partnerships with schools and the primary care practices is a way to do that … and get the biggest bang for our buck.”

ABC News’ Cheyenne Haslett contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Lawyers give closing arguments in Elizabeth Holmes trial, say she chose ‘fraud over business failure’

Lawyers give closing arguments in Elizabeth Holmes trial, say she chose ‘fraud over business failure’
Lawyers give closing arguments in Elizabeth Holmes trial, say she chose ‘fraud over business failure’
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

(SAN JOSE, Calif.) — Federal prosecutors went toe-to-toe with defense attorneys for Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes as both sides delivered hours-long closing arguments in her criminal fraud trial.

Prosecutors concluded their roughly three-hour-long closing statements on Thursday, and defense attorneys were over two hours into their remarks when Judge Edward J. Davila adjourned court for the day.

Holmes’ lawyer, Kevin Downey, is expected to resume his closing argument Friday morning, followed by a rebuttal from prosecutors, meaning jury deliberations could begin as early as Friday.

U.S. Attorney Jeff Schenk told the court on Thursday that Holmes had a choice to make in 2009, 2010 and again in 2013 — years when he said the blood-testing startup that would later grow into a $9 billion business was running out of money.

Holmes “chose fraud over business failure,” Schenk said, adding that “she chose to be dishonest with her investors and with her patients.”

“That choice was not only callous, it was criminal,” he continued.

​​Schenk then asked the jury to consider what an honest pitch to investors would have sounded like back in 2013.

“Ms. Holmes knew that these honest statements would not have led to any revenue, and she chose a different path,” he said.

Downey later shot down Schenk’s claims, telling jurors that, “Elizabeth Holmes was building a business and not a criminal enterprise.”

“The government would have you believe that entity that she presided over as CEO was built by lies, by swindling, by half-truths, by misrepresentations that were carried out over years and years and years,” Downey said.

“I think you will see that the full picture reveals something very different from what the government has been presenting to you for three months and, indeed, for the last three hours,” he added.

Holmes, who completed her testimony last week after seven days on the stand, is charged with 11 counts of fraud for allegedly defrauding investors and patients.

The 37-year-old faces nine counts of wire fraud and two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and could be sentenced to decades in prison if convicted. She has pleaded not guilty.

By dawn, over 60 members of the press and public were already lined up outside of the Robert F. Peckham Federal Courthouse, the crowd spilling out of the courtyard and onto South First Street. Hours later, at around 8 a.m., Holmes, her mother, her father and her partner, Billy Evans, arrived at the courthouse, all wearing blue and walking hand in hand as the rest of her entourage trailed behind.

At 9:05 a.m., the judge and the jury took their seats in the fifth-floor courtroom. Three minutes later, Schenk began.

One by one, the prosecution projected the picture of each witness their team had called to the stand as Schenk reminded jurors what the investors, patients and others had said to implicate Holmes.

Among those who testified were former lab director Dr. Adam Rosendorff, who said he voiced concerns to Holmes over lab procedures and test accuracy; lab associate turned whistleblower Erika Cheung, who said she was uncomfortable processing patient blood-samples; and former board member Gen. James Mattis, who said he was left to learn about the turmoil at Theranos from the press.

“[Theranos] is the story of a tragedy, but it is also the story of some people acting with really remarkable integrity,” Schenk said, pointing to the decisions made by both Rosendorff, Cheung and senior scientist Surekha Gangakhedkar, another government witness.

For Downey, the fate of his client — who was once was hailed as the next Steve Jobs — comes down to the question of intent.

“At the end of the day, the question you’re really asking yourself is, what was Ms. Holmes intent?” he asked. “Was she trying to defraud people?”

New episodes of “The Dropout” are available for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music or wherever you listen to podcasts. Click here to find the show on your favorite app.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 12/16/21

Scoreboard roundup — 12/16/21
Scoreboard roundup — 12/16/21
iStock

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Thursday’s sports events:

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
Indiana 122, Detroit 113
Brooklyn 114, Philadelphia 105
New York 116, Houston 103
Phoenix 118, Washington 98
Chicago at Toronto (Postponed)

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Tampa Bay 2, Ottawa 1
Carolina 5, Detroit 3
Los Angeles 4, Florida 1
Montreal 3, Philadelphia 2 (SO)
Vegas 5, New Jersey 3
NY Islanders 3, Boston 1
Nashville 5, Colorado 2
Buffalo 3, Minnesota 2 (SO)
Edmonton 5, Columbus 2
Vancouver 5, San Jose 2
Toronto at Calgary 9 (Postponed)

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Kansas City 34, LA Chargers 28 (OT)

TOP-25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Duke 92, Appalachian St. 67

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ cast teases what to expect: “Villains. Friendship. Fighting. Fun.”

‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ cast teases what to expect: “Villains. Friendship. Fighting. Fun.”
‘Spider-Man: No Way Home’ cast teases what to expect: “Villains. Friendship. Fighting. Fun.”
Courtesy of Marvel

Spider-Man: No Way Home swings into theaters Friday.

Stars Tom Holland, Zendaya, and Jacob Batalon remained tight-lipped about the film’s plot ahead of the release, as they’re sworn to secrecy — which is something they’re used to by now. 

Recalling the first Spider-Man film — No Way Home is the third — Zendaya says, “Like, the biggest thing that…the biggest spoil was like, my name was MJ. And now if you only knew,” referring to the classic comic book character she plays, though her role was unknown at the time.

Batalon doubled down on that statement, before Zendaya adds, “The things I can’t say now. So…we got some good practice. I think the stakes are just a little bit higher.”

Even though the cast can’t give any major spoilers away, the trio did tease what fans can expect. 

“Villains. Friendship. Fighting. Fun. Emotion. Scariness,” Holland reveals.

“New sides to the characters we’ve never seen before,” Zendaya chimes in, to which Holland responds, “That’s very true. Jacob becomes a hero.”

Batalon confirms, “Yup, all of those things, plus more.”

While the frenzy surrounding Spider-Man is something that has been a “very overwhelming experience” for Holland, he says being able to experience the mania with his cast mates has made all the difference.

“There’s no one I would rather do this with,” he shares. “And you know, this has been a very overwhelming experience. The last six years of our life has felt like we’ve been on a roller coaster, so to be on that roller coaster together makes it that much easier.”

Spider-Man: No Way Home is a co-production of Sony Pictures and Marvel Studios, the latter of which is owned by ABC News’ parent company, Disney.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Twenty One Pilots tease upcoming video for “The Outside”

Twenty One Pilots tease upcoming video for “The Outside”
Twenty One Pilots tease upcoming video for “The Outside”
Credit: Ashley Osborn

It appears Twenty One Pilots will be kicking off 2022 with a new video.

In a tweet Thursday, the duo revealed that they plan to film a visual for their Scaled and Icy song “The Outside” “after the holidays.”

While you wait for that to arrive, you can check out a newly released live video for “The Outside,” filmed during the “Stressed Out” outfit’s headlining set at Mexico’s Corona Capital Festival last month. The clip is streaming now on YouTube.

Scaled and Icy, the sixth Twenty One Pilots album, was released this past May. “The Outside” will be the fourth Scaled and Icy song to get a video, following lead single “Shy Away,” “Choker” and “Saturday.”

In addition to releasing a new video, Twenty One Pilots’ 2022 plans also include their headlining Icy tour, which launches in the U.S. in August.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Hear Taylor Swift’s “Ivy” soundtrack Hailee Steinfeld’s love scene in the new episode of ‘Dickinson’

Hear Taylor Swift’s “Ivy” soundtrack Hailee Steinfeld’s love scene in the new episode of ‘Dickinson’
Hear Taylor Swift’s “Ivy” soundtrack Hailee Steinfeld’s love scene in the new episode of ‘Dickinson’
Courtesy Apple TV+

Fans of Taylor Swift and the Apple TV+ show Dickinson — but particularly those EmiSue stans out there — will be greeted by “Ivy” in a very special scene in the show’s ninth episode.

Dropping today, the penultimate episode of the series sees real-life poet Emily Dickinson, played by Hailee Steinfeld, in an intimate scene with her longtime forbidden love, Susan Gilbert, played by Ella Hunt

“Ivy,” from Taylor’s album evermore, sets the mood for the scene onscreen, and it did the same while the two actresses filmed, Hunt tells ABC Audio.

“I loved that song before we started shooting,” Hunt explained. “And the first time we shot that scene, I was trying to hold back tears from my eyes. It felt so meaningful, because we were listening to the song as we were getting it on.”

“It was a lot,” Hunt admits of the combination of the emotional scene and the song, before adding with a laugh, “It was very impactful!”

Incidentally, this isn’t the first time Taylor has been linked to Emily Dickinson: Fans have speculated that evermore was inspired by her. The album was announced on December 10, Emily’s birthday, and Dickinson ended her poem “One Sister I Have in Our House” with the word “forevermore.”

For the record, Dickinson star and producer Hailee — a friend of Taylor’s — admitted that she’d heard those rumors too, and told a U.K. radio station earlier this year that she was “dying to find out” if they’re true. As she put it, “The clues are lining up!”

You may recall that Hailee was one of the many female celebs who co-starred in Taylor’s video for “Bad Blood.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Darren Criss on his hippo holiday hit: “I’ve always been really obsessed with it”

Darren Criss on his hippo holiday hit: “I’ve always been really obsessed with it”
Darren Criss on his hippo holiday hit: “I’ve always been really obsessed with it”
Scott Schaefer

One of 2021’s more unusual Christmas songs is Darren Criss‘ rendition of “I Want a Hippopotamus for Christmas,” originally recorded by 10-year-old Gayla Peevey in 1953. Darren says it’s definitely not one of those songs that everyone knows — and that’s one reason why he likes it.

“It seems to be very divisive: Either you know it and you love it, or you’ve never heard it, ever,” Darren tells ABC Audio. “I’ll talk to some people from certain parts of the country or the world [and] they’re like, ‘I’ve never heard this song!’ Somebody heard my version of it, and was like, ‘Did you write this one?’ And I would say, “I wish I wrote that song!”

Darren says he’s been “really obsessed” with “Hippopotamus” since he was a kid, because he couldn’t get over how great Peevey’s voice was. 

“I remember being 10, being like, ‘Wait, she’s 10 as well?’ like, ‘Wow…She sounds like an adult,'” he recalls.

“It has a lot of meaning to me…just ’cause it’s a very silly, fun song, that my mom loves to lip-sync to around the house,” he laughs.  And while he was determined to put the tune on his holiday album A Very Darren Crissmas, he knew that he needed to change it up.

“With this song, it’s usually covered by…female artists, and it’s usually a straight cover,” he notes. “I knew if I was gonna do it. I’d have to justify it by [doing] something completely different, which is this sort of half-time, electronic, very contemporary, IDGAF-kind of feeling.”

“That’s kind of what I do with everything,” Darren says. “I like taking things that you think you know and trying to make you reevaluate what you thought you knew to be true.”

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